Linda Linda Linda: Viewer Comments

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Linda Linda Linda
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    by Ian Mac


Three girls need to learn a song to play in front of school as part of leaving ceremony. The events leading up to this include fall outs, falling asleep in class, lots of practicing and bonding, mini disasters befalling the main characters... The girl chosen to sing isn't even Japanese but a Korean exchange student who often has misunderstandings when conversing in Japanese. The song they choose is called "Linda, Linda, Linda" (by the Bluetones, a Japanese punk band). A feel good film, with warm characters, and a great song for them to learn and play.
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    by TheDenizen


If you can watch this whole movie and NOT be totally swept up in its exuberance, then you have no soul. A fun, upbeat rock n roll flick with great tunes you'll catch yourself humming for days.
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    by NO43635


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    by Dzei


Starts off as a typical teen movie, but gains momentum along the way. The musical performance makes it all worthwhile. The theme song is very catchy. I still haven't got it out of my head.
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    by blofeld


I saw this film at the 2006 NZ International film festival. I went mad and saw 28 films in two weeks, and this was the highlight of the festival for me.

It's a "put on a show", slacker comedy. Great characterizations, and brilliant young comedic actresses. I am still singing the theme tune a year later, and it's in Japanese!

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    by JH3515




"Linda Linda Linda" is the story of four high school girls and their band preparing for a performance at a school festival. Early in the film it is revealed that one of the girls has gotten into a fight with a member of the band and they've decided to split. Just as the coordinator is ready to pull their performance slot, they decide to go for it; but now they are short a guitarist and vocalist. After a little debate, the old keyboardist Kei (Yu Kashii) declares that she'll play guitar.

Finding a new vocalist is not so easy, as no one in the band has any interest in singing. Eventually, the girls are sitting on a brick wall and decide that whomever they see walk by next will be the new singer. A couple of false starts later, Korean exchange student Son (BAE Doo-na) walks by and accidently accepts their invitation. The rest of the film is pretty firmly focused on the four girls learning the music and demonstrating the amount of hard work they have to put in, to the exclusion of the rest of the world. The music they end up choosing from a box of old tapes and records, and one of them decides they should play The Blue Hearts songs "Linda Linda," "The Endless Song," and "My Right Hand."

This music is the impetus that makes an otherwise pretty deliberately paced film move forward at a decent clip; the music is upbeat and exciting. We, the audience, get to watch as everyone in the film learns, which is a very interesting thing to watch. We watch the band learn the songs, we watch Son learn Japanese, we watch Kyoko (Aki Maeda), the drummer learn to come out of her shell, and at least the first two item of that list were happening for real. Only one of the girls is a musician, the rest had to learn to play for their parts, and BAE Doo-na spoke very little Japanese going into the production, but by the end everyone in the band is working as a convincing and rocking unit.

I rarely get chills in films anymore, but after watching the girls' band practicing night and day and struggling to get it right, the first time they nail a song in the practice space, I got chills. It was an exhilirating moment, not to mention the climax of the film, the actual performance. We struggle with these characters all through the film, building to this one very definite moment, and when it arrives, we are not disappointed.

The final tune the band plays, "The Endless Song," is a perfect ending to the film and very effectively sums up the band's attitude and their desire to "sing an endless song for this asshole of a world." The film's direction was superb, by focusing so directly on the band and their struggle, we feel vindicated at the end when they succeed, and there are no loose ends to tie up, no sub-plots left open, just a good, old-fashioned happy ending. BAE Doo-na is the star of this film and she proves it with every second she's onscreen, creating a very likable character who, despite, or perhaps because of, her language barrier is able to tell things they way they are.

I was very impressed, and I'll definitely be picking up the DVD--probably also a couple of Blue Hearts CDs. The girls also released a single in Japan under the name of their band in the film.

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    by MS4219


Never heard of the Blue Hearts 'til I saw this movie. Seems that the girls could have played music from any other band and still looked okay. Not a high drama movie, but the girls can play rock/punk fairly well and I wished they had played more.
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